Title: Fwd: White House looking for "way out" of
war
From Capitol Hill Blue (a conservative news source)
1600 Pennsylvania
White House advisors looking for a "way out" of war
with Iraq
By CHB Staff
Feb 20, 2003, 05:47
Some strategists within the Bush Administration are urging
the President to look for an "exit strategy" on Iraq,
warning the tough stance on war with the Arab country has left the
country in a "no win" situation.
"At this point, the United States and Britain does not have
the support for passage of a second UN resolution," admits a
White House aide.
In addition, Republican leaders in both the House and Senate are
telling the Presidently privately that he is losing support in
Congress for a "go it alone war" against Iraq.
"The President's war plans are in trouble, there's no doubt
about that," says an advisor to House Speaker Dennis J. Hastert.
"Some Republican members want a vote on military action and some
of those say they would, at this point, vote against such
action."
Some White House advisors are urging the President to consider
complying with the UN position or to look for other "face saving"
ways to avoid war with Iraq.
President Bush, however, is reported to be "hanging tough"
on plans to invade Iraq, even though his closest advisors tell him
such a move could be "disasterous" politically.
"The President has backed himself and the nation into a
corner in a no win situation," says political scientist George
Harleigh. "World opinion is against him. Public opinion polls
show support eroding among Americans."
Republican campaign strategist Vern Wilson says he is advising
his clients to "put some distance between themselves and the
President" on war with Iraq.
"When you have former military leaders questioning the
wisdom of war, then you have Vietnam and Gulf War veterans marching
against the war, when you have Republicans in Congress questioning the
President's judgment, it tells me we could have a problem,"
Wilson said Wednesday.
The escalating loss of support for the U.S. officials has led to
an increase of defiance by Iraqi officials, who have yet to live up to
promises of increased support and aid to U.N. inspectors looking for
the country's suspected weapons of mass destruction.
Taking heart from the split in the Security Council regarding
possible military action against the country. and the world-wide
protests against war, Iraq has changed from saying that its officials
are complying with U.N. demands to asking for a lifting of sanctions
instituted against Iraq after it was forced out of Kuwait more than 10
years ago.
"We have not seen any positive moves on the part of Iraq,"
one U.N. official in Iraq told The Washington Post, while another
said, "They are not fulfilling their promises."
U.N. inspectors returned to Iraq in November after the Security
Council unanimously passed Resolution 1441, a strongly worded document
that promised "serious consequences" should Iraq not live up
to the stipulations outlined in the document. Those included giving
U.N. inspectors unrestricted access inside Iraq and orders to report
any interference by Iraq with the inspections.
However, since last Friday, when lead weapons inspectors Hans
Blix and Mohammad ElBaradei reported to the Security Council, the
United Nations has not seen Iraq carry through on promises to deliver
documents about old weapons programs nor have there been interviews
with scientists involved with possible weapons technology.
Large anti-war demonstrations were staged in several cities
around the world. The United States and Britain are having trouble
finding support for anything stronger than additional inspections in
Iraq in their Security Council deliberations.
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